Great-Martyr Katherine

Lives of Saints for Young People

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Saints. Asceties of Piety. Church Holy Days

Rating: 10|Votes: 3

Great-Martyr Katherine

Lives of Saints for Young People

After praying fervently that night, St. Katherine fell asleep and dreamt that she was standing before the Virgin and Child. The Child’s face was turned away from her. When His mother asked Him to look at the beautiful girl, He said He wouldn’t until she changed her pagan ways and returned to the holy monk for guidance. Eagerly St. Katherine did so. The monk taught her about the One True God, the Creator of Heaven and Earth, and the Saviour of Mankind. St. Katherine soon believed in Jesus Christ with all her heart and was baptized.

On the Faith of Christ's True Disciple

Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov)

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Homilies and Spiritual Instruction

On the Faith of Christ's True Disciple

Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov)

Probably we are speaking of the faith we read about in the Holy Scriptures and in the Lives of the Saints; the faith which healed, worked miracles, gave unshakeable courage to the martyrs, fed the desert dwellers, and carried humble ascetics into the heavenly realms. It is that great faith which is so mysterious and unfathomable to us; faith that, we must admit, disturbs us when we read Christ’s words in the Gospels, heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out the demons!

Leo Tolstoy—A Mirror of Russian Doubt

Antonina Maga

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Orthodoxy Today

Rating: 9,5|Votes: 2

Leo Tolstoy—A Mirror of Russian Doubt

Antonina Maga

"To the attentive reader, several Tolstoys exist: in Chertkov's publication we see the accuser, the struggler against monarchy. Another Tolstoy is the doubter, the truth seeker, and that is the image which the modern reader has yet to rediscover."

Tolstoy Excommunicated Himself, But Christians Have Compassion

Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov), S. V. Stepashin

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Orthodoxy Today

Rating: 10|Votes: 6

Tolstoy Excommunicated Himself, But Christians Have Compassion

Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov), S. V. Stepashin

The Holy Synod simply cited by its decision a fact that had already taken place—Count Leo Tolstoy excommunicated himself from the Church and completely broke off ties with it. This is something that he not only did not deny, but even resolutely emphasized at every convenient opportunity.

Why Are We Orthodox?

Alexei Ilyich Osipov

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Coming to Orthodoxy

Rating: 8,1|Votes: 7

Why Are We Orthodox?

Alexei Ilyich Osipov

If a person is already convinced that God exists, then an even more difficult problem arises. There are many religions, but which one of them is true? What should he become? Should he become a Christian, or why not a Moslem, or a Buddhist, or a hare Krishna?